FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Alisse Kingsley March 30, 2016 + 1 323 467 8508 [email protected]

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Alisse Kingsley March 30, 2016 + 1 323 467 8508 Alissethemuse@Aol.Com FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Alisse Kingsley March 30, 2016 + 1 323 467 8508 [email protected] Lucia Iglesias (UNESCO) +33 145 68 17 02 [email protected] PRESIDENT OBAMA AND MICHELLE OBAMA TO HOST INTERNATIONAL JAZZ DAY 2016 ALL-STAR GLOBAL CONCERT AT THE WHITE HOUSE FEATURING HERBIE HANCOCK, STING, ARETHA FRANKLIN, TROMBONE SHORTY, DIANA KRALL, AL JARREAU, HUGH MASEKELA, BUDDY GUY, CHICK COREA, WAYNE SHORTER, PAT METHENY AND MANY OTHERS All-Star Global Concert Will Be Televised on ABC on April 30 for the Fifth Annual International Jazz Day Worldwide Celebration Recognizing Jazz and Its Significant Role in Cultural Diplomacy Paris and Washington, D.C. – United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Director-General Irina Bokova and UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador Herbie Hancock are pleased to announce the fifth annual International Jazz Day, which will be celebrated around the world on April 30, 2016. President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama will host the 5th anniversary International Jazz Day All-Star Global Concert at the White House on April 29th and this spectacular event will be broadcast on International Jazz Day as a one-hour primetime ABC television special on Saturday evening, April 30th and streamed on the United Nations, UNESCO, U.S. State Department and White House websites. The concert will feature an extraordinary array of artists from around the world paying tribute to the truly American art form of jazz. Washington, D.C. has been selected to serve as the 2016 Global Host City, and International Jazz Day programs are made possible by Toyota, the 2016 Lead Partner. Presented each year on April 30th in partnership with the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, International Jazz Day highlights the power of jazz as a force for freedom and creativity, promotes intercultural dialogue through respect and understanding, and unites people from all corners of the globe. The day is recognized on the official calendars of both UNESCO and the United Nations. The All-Star Global Concert at the White House will feature stellar performances by Joey Alexander, Terence Blanchard, Kris Bowers, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Till Brönner, Terri Lyne Carrington, Chick Corea, Jamie Cullum, Kurt Elling, Aretha Franklin, Robert Glasper, Buddy Guy, Herbie Hancock, Jimmy Heath, Dave Holland, Zakir Hussain, Al Jarreau, Diana Krall, Lionel Loueke, Hugh Masekela, Christian McBride, John McLaughlin, Pat Metheny, Marcus Miller, James Morrison, Danilo Pérez, Rebirth Brass Band, Dianne Reeves, Lee Ritenour, Wayne Shorter, Esperanza Spalding, Sting, Trombone Shorty, Chucho Valdés, Ben Williams and others, with further details to be announced shortly. John Beasley will serve as the evening’s Musical Director. UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador Herbie Hancock said, “We are thrilled that President Obama and Michelle Obama are hosting the International Jazz Day All-Star Global Concert at the White House, and are truly grateful for their commitment to jazz and its role in building bridges and uniting people around the world. Over the past five years, the innovation and creativity of Jazz Day has been a beacon of light to millions of people who find common ground and communicate through the values inherent in jazz. On April 30th, people of all ages in all corners of the globe will participate in International Jazz Day. A wide range of momentous events will take place in thousands of neighborhoods – and the streets will be alive with the sounds of peace and freedom.” Many acclaimed musicians and educators will participate in a daylong series of free jazz performances, master classes, improvisational workshops, roundtable discussions, education programs, jam sessions, and community outreach initiatives at schools, embassies, arts centers, hospitals, museums, social service agencies, jazz clubs, senior centers, metro stations, recreation centers and parks across Washington, D.C. on April 30th. These programs in Washington, D.C. will be among the thousands of International Jazz Day live performances, educational activities, and community service programs taking place in all 50 U.S. states and in more than 190 countries on all seven continents. “Jazz was born in the US and traveled the world as a music of tolerance, freedom and human dignity. This is why UNESCO created International Jazz Day and we are extremely pleased that in 2016 Washington, DC has been designated the host city for this global celebration, with a unique All Star Concert at the White House, hosted by the President of the United States Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. This event reminds us Jazz is more than music – it is a universal message of peace with rhythm and meaning,” declared the Director General of UNESCO, Irina Bokova. The Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz is once again working with UNESCO and its field offices, national commissions, networks, Associated Schools, universities and institutes, public radio and public television stations, and NGOs to ensure their involvement and participation in International Jazz Day 2016. Additionally, in countries throughout the world, libraries, schools, universities, performing arts venues, community centers, artists, and arts organizations of all disciplines will be celebrating the day through presentations, concerts, and other jazz-focused programs. According to Tom Carter, President of the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, “International Jazz Day places a strong emphasis on education programs and community service. Many of these worldwide programs are now provided year-round in big cities, small towns, and even remote villages. It is a testament to all those involved with International Jazz Day that we are reaching people on every continent, including some of the most vulnerable and challenged individuals and communities.” As part of the International Jazz Day worldwide celebration, the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz will launch Math, Science & Music, a groundbreaking education platform with free, engaging curricula, games, apps and other online elements that use music as a tool to teach math and science to K-12 and college students. The program will address the growing need for students to gain skills and knowledge in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) subjects and learn to think creatively. The Institute is collaborating with international math, science and music experts at seven leading universities to develop the program, which initially will be offered in English, and in later years will be available in other United Nations languages. Math, Science & Music will debut earlier in the week on Tuesday, April 26 at a presentation at the U.S. Department of Education hosted by Secretary of Education John King. For more information about International Jazz Day and to register events on the official website, please visit www.jazzday.com or www.unesco.org/jazzday. ### .
Recommended publications
  • Press Release ( 181.58
    INTERNATIONAL JAZZ DAY PRESS RELEASE INTERNATIONAL JAZZ DAY 2021 FOR A CULTURE OF PEACE, A CELEBRATION ACROSS CENTRAL AFRICA Yaoundé, April 28, 2021: UNESCO is pleased to announce that the 10th Edition Internatio- nal Jazz Day will be celebrated all over Africa on 30 April 2021. The International Jazz Day brings together countries and communities around the world each year to celebrate jazz and the role that this genre of music plays in fostering dialogue, fighting discrimination, and promoting human dignity. This year’s celebrations come at a time when the African Union has officially adopted the following slogan; «Arts, culture, and heritage: a lever for building the Africa we want,» as its 2021 theme. In a context marked by the COVID-19 crisis, and its impact on cultural and artistic ex- pressions, the Central Africa region will join the celebrations with artistic, intellectual, and educational activities while also giving the floor to recognized African artists and intellec- tuals. The International Jazz Day offers an opportunity to continue the conversation on the culture of peace and to build resilience among artists who have been particularly impacted since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Angola, Cameroon, Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, and Tchad will be or- ganizing a series of activities on this day including among other things Jazz concerts and an online round table on the shared values of jazz for a culture of peace and Congolese rumba. This day’s concerts around Central Africa will bring together some of the most famous jazz artists in the world like Chico Pinheiro (Brazil), Luís Guerreiro (Portugal), Catarina dos Santos (Portugal), Derek Nakamoto (United States), Sam Mangwana (DRC), Greg Belobo (CMR) and, many others.
    [Show full text]
  • Herbie Hancock to Celebrate International Jazz Day at All-Star Concert in Osaka, Japan
    usnews.com http://www.usnews.com/news/entertainment/articles/2014/03/04/osaka-to-host-all-star-concert-on-intl-jazz-day Herbie Hancock to celebrate International Jazz Day at all-star concert in Osaka, Japan By CHARLES J. GANS, Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) — Herbie Hancock reckons he's performed more often in Japan than in his hometown of Chicago during his professional career. The pianist will be back next month for an all-star concert at Osaka Castle Park highlighting the third annual International Jazz Day. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization has chosen Osaka as the host city for International Jazz Day 2014, which will be celebrated around the world on April 30. Hancock, a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador, says it's an opportunity to show appreciation for Japanese jazz fans who have been among the world's greatest supporters of the music. He first performed in Japan with Miles Davis' quintet in 1964, and has toured there with his own electric and acoustic groups for decades. "Japanese audiences are very loyal," said Hancock, interviewed ahead of Tuesday's official announcement of the International Jazz Day program. "In Japan, art is really placed on a high level, and jazz is really honored and accepted as being a fine music — much more in comparison to the States." Osaka was chosen as the host city because it "played a leading role in the early days of jazz in Japan" in the 1920s and its jazz scene remains lively today, said Tom Carter, president of the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, who is partnering with UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova to present International Jazz Day.
    [Show full text]
  • TKA APAP Brochure 20
    2017 - 2018 SQUIRREL NUT ZIPPERS DAVINA and the VAGABONDS Table of Contents Afro-Cuban All Stars 1 Ann Hampton Callaway 2 Arturo Sandoval 3 Béla Fleck 4 Bettye LaVette 5 Agents Bill Charlap 6 Brian Blade & The Fellowship Band 7 Catherine Russell 8 Cécile McLorin Salvant 9 Agents Charles Lloyd 10 Chick Corea 11 Jack Randall - [email protected] Davina & The Vagabonds 12 AK, AZ, CA, HI, IL, IA, MI, MN, NE, NV, OR, WA, WI, & CANADA Eileen Ivers 13 Ellis Marsalis 14 Jamie Ziefert - [email protected] Elvin Bishop 15 CT, DE, ME, MD, MA, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VT, VA, WV, & D.C. Harold López-Nussa 16 Herlin Riley 17 Dan Peraino - [email protected] Hot Club of Cowtown 18 AL, AR, CO, FL, GA, KY, ID, IN, KS, LA, MS, MO, MT, NC, ND, NM, Jack Broadbent 19 OH, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, WY, PR, & US VIRGIN ISLANDS James Cotton 20 Jamison Ross 21 Gunter Schroder - [email protected] JLCO with Wynton Marsalis 22 EUROPE, NORTH AFRICA, SOUTH AFRICA, MIDDLE EAST Joey Alexander 23 Joey DeFrancesco 24 Matt McCluskey - [email protected] John Pizzarelli 25 ASIA/PACIFIC, AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND, John Sebastian 26 LATIN/SOUTH AMERICA, CARIBBEAN Lisa Fischer 27 Marcia Ball 28 Ted Kurland - [email protected] Melissa Aldana 29 PRESIDENT Meshell Ndegeocello 30 Pat Metheny 31 Ravi Coltrane 32 Red Baraat 33 Savion Glover 34 APAP BOOTH #1003 Sonny Knight and The Lakers 35 Soul Rebels 36 Squirrel Nut Zippers 37 Stacey Kent 38 The Kurland Agency 173 Brighton Avenue Boston, MA 02134 p | (617) 254-0007 e | [email protected] www.thekurlandagency.com AFRO-CUBAN ALL STARS Juan de Marcos González, founder of Sierra Maestra and AFRO-CUBAN ALL STARS and one of the key creators of the Buena Vista Social Club, began his career paying tribute to the traditional Cuban music of the 1950’s, considered the golden age of Cuban music.
    [Show full text]
  • Johnaye Kendrick Photo by Daniel Sheehan LETTER from the DIRECTOR One Foot in Summer …
    A Mirror and Focus for the Jazz Community August 2018 Vol. 34, No. 08 EARSHOT JAZZSeattle, Washington Johnaye Kendrick Photo by Daniel Sheehan LETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR One foot in Summer … …the other foot in the coming The upcoming festival builds on fall. First of all, thank you for your that legacy, focusing on the multi- support of this summer’s expanded faceted creative momentum of to- concert activity. We’ve had remark- day’s jazz world. There is so much able opportunities to pull alongside great music being made right now. some of today’s most expansive jazz With all honor to the Black cultural thinking, from New York and Chi- core of jazz, the Earshot festival, as cago, and from Seattle’s own creative DownBeat magazine once said, “dis- artists. rupts assumptions, gets in your face Now, as we approach the waning and finds fresh synergies.” days of summer, plans are being fi- Some of the fresh synergies we’re nalized and excitement is building proud to unveil this year include a for this fall’s Earshot Jazz Festival, special four-day residency with 2019 kicking off October 7, and running NEA Jazz Master Maria Schneider, in venues all around the city through and a featured artist residency with November 4. We’re cooking up one our own Jovino Santos Neto. Also, of the most exciting Earshot festivals the new Jazz at Langston series, ever, and you’re invited! within this festival, will honor Se- Tickets for most shows will be avail- attle legends like Dave Lewis, and don, Billy Kilson, Andy Ezrin, and able this month, with Earshot Jazz introduce bright new artists like Ben Williams.
    [Show full text]
  • Downbeat Magazine
    downbeat.com http://www.downbeat.com/default.asp?sect=news&subsect=news_detail&nid=2378 DownBeat Magazine All-Star Lineup Shines at International Jazz Day Concert The third annual International Jazz Day concert, held this year in the host city of Osaka, Japan, on April 30, offered a plethora of brilliant performances. Spearheaded by the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), International Jazz Day is a celebration in which cities around the globe host jazz concerts and educational events. This year, 196 countries participated with Somalia being a late entry. Reportedly, even the United States’ McMurdo Station in Antarctica joined in the festivities. Pianist John Beasley served as musical director for the grand concert in Osaka. The lineup boasted the same customary star power of internationally acclaimed musicians as the two years prior. But this year, the musicians veered away from the heavy emphasis on conventional jazz repertoire. Held at historic Osaka Castle Park, the two-hour performance took on an auspicious tone from the beginning with Steve Turre playing the conch shells and Shuichi Hidano pounding a massive Taiko drum alongside two other traditional Japanese percussionists. The cross-cultural invocation alluded to a Santería religious ceremony in which musicians begin by playing a “Changó” to create pathways for sacred West African deities. Soon after T.S. Monk kept the percussive spirited going by delivering a hard-hitting solo improvisation on the trap drums. That mesmerizing one-two punch of an opener dovetailed into a vivacious reading of Horace Silver’s “Saint Vitus Dance” with Dee Dee Bridgewater singing the intricate melody with the fluidity of a seasoned hard-bop saxophonist.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of UNESCO's International Jazz
    FORUM FOR INTER-AMERICAN RESEARCH (FIAR) VOL. 12.2 (OCT. 2019) 5-14 ISSN: 1867-1519 © forum for inter-american research “Jazz Embodies Human Rights”: The Politics of UNESCO’s International Jazz Day MARIO DUNKEL (CARL VON OSSIETZKY UNIVERSITY OF OLDENBURG, OLDENBURG) Abstract This article explores the representation of jazz at UNESCO’s International Jazz Day, focusing in particular on the 2016 edition of the event hosted by former President Barack Obama at the White House. It locates Jazz Day in the history of US jazz diplomacy, demonstrating that the event results from strategies of the US government that emerged in the 1950s and sought to use jazz as an emblem of an American social order that was ethically superior to the Soviet Union. While Jazz Day – in the tradition of US jazz diplomacy programs – casts jazz as an embodiment of intercultural dialogue, diversity, and human rights, this article seeks to juxtapose this rhetoric with the event’s economics and politics. It argues that Jazz Day’s messages of diversity, intercultural dialogue, universal human rights, and peace, in their one-dimensional and non-intersectional form, ultimately serve to obfuscate the economic and political power interests that underlie the event. Contrary to its rhetoric, Jazz Day has so far failed to challenge the power structures that lie at the heart of a socially unequal global order built on the denial of basic human rights. Keywords: UNESCO, International Jazz Day, Politics, Jazz, Diplomacy, International Relations Introduction But jazz is also about diversity, drawing on roots in Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, and Celebrating the fifth edition of UNESCO’s elsewhere.
    [Show full text]
  • Sfjazz Education Become a Member Tickets About Sfjazz
    TICKETS TICKETS ON SALE 2|28 • 11AM • MEMBERS SFJAZZ Afro-Latin Jazz guest instructors OKAN 3|6 • 11AM • PUBLIC EDUCATION FREE SUMMER WORKSHOPS BART These workshops for advanced middle and high school WEB Civic Center Station GOUGH FRANKLIN VAN POLK LARKIN HYDE jazz musicians focus on theory, improvisation, audition SFJAZZ.org (SFJAZZ is only a NESS ST ST ST skills, and more. Sign-ups open May 1. 10 minute walk from ST DIGITAL LAB INTENSIVES PHONE Civic Center BART.) ST AVE • 12-4PM 7|11 THEORY & SIGHT-READING MUNI ST 8 Learn music and audio production in our state-of-the-art Public 866.920.5299 GROVE TH ST Digital Lab! We off er dynamic programs for older teens 7|19 AFRO-LATIN JAZZ W/ SPECIAL GUESTS OKAN • 1:30-4:30PM Members 415.788.7353 Metro: Van Ness or ST Civic Center Stations HAYES 9 and adults in songwriting, arranging, production, record- 7|25 IMPROVISATION W/ JEANNE GEIGER • 10AM-2PM TH Bus: 5, 5R, 6, 7X, 21, ST ing, mixing, and more. Our low student-teacher ratio and IN PERSON FELL ST 10 8|1 AUDITION SKILLS • 10AM-2PM 47, 49, 7, 7R, 90 TH the latest in gear and software make our intensives the 201 Franklin Street (at Fell), San Francisco ST OAK ST 11 summer destination for digital music. Each series contains PARKING TH 4 SFJAZZ.ORG/EDUCATION ST twenty hours of instruction Performing Arts ST Garage Members $300 | Public $360 Civic Center Garage MARKET SUMMER INTERNSHIPS California Parking ENSEMBLES & MORE Place 2 Park For detailed directions, please visit 511.org 6|23-27 INTRO TO MUSIC PRODUCTION • 1-5PM SFJAZZ’s passionate interns are indispensable to achieving Douglas Parking Auditions for the Fall 2020 Monday Night Band take our goals as an organization.
    [Show full text]
  • John Bailey Randy Brecker Paquito D'rivera Lezlie Harrison
    192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:36 AM Page 1 E Festival & Outdoor THE LATIN SIDE 42 Concert Guide OF HOT HOUSE P42 pages 30-41 June 2018 www.hothousejazz.com Smoke Jazz & Supper Club Page 17 Blue Note Page 19 Lezlie Harrison Paquito D'Rivera Randy Brecker John Bailey Jazz Forum Page 10 Smalls Jazz Club Page 10 Where To Go & Who To See Since 1982 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:36 AM Page 2 2 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:37 AM Page 3 3 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:37 AM Page 4 4 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:37 AM Page 5 5 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:37 AM Page 6 6 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:37 AM Page 7 7 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:37 AM Page 8 8 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 11:45 AM Page 9 9 192496_HH_June_0 5/25/18 10:37 AM Page 10 WINNING SPINS By George Kanzler RUMPET PLAYERS ARE BASI- outing on soprano sax. cally extroverts, confident and proud Live 1988, Randy Brecker Quintet withT a sound and tone to match. That's (MVDvisual, DVD & CD), features the true of the two trumpeters whose albums reissue of a long out-of-print album as a comprise this Winning Spins: John Bailey CD, accompanying a previously unreleased and Randy Brecker. Both are veterans of DVD of the live date, at Greenwich the jazz scene, but with very different Village's Sweet Basil, one of New York's career arcs. John has toiled as a first-call most prominent jazz clubs in the 1980s trumpeter for big bands and recording ses- and 1990s.
    [Show full text]
  • Happy International Jazz Day from New Orleans with Herbie Hancock!
    scpr.org http://www.scpr.org/blogs/newmedia/2012/04/30/5853/happy-international-jazz-day-new- orleans-herbie-ha/ Happy International Jazz Day from New Orleans with Herbie Hancock! Only in New Orleans could you get hundreds of people to wake up early on a Monday morning for a jazz concert - especially after three days of intense music and partying for the first weekend of the 2012 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. Well, sort of. As Mayor Mitch Landrieu said in his brief remarks opening this sunrise concert kicking off the first-ever UNESCO International Jazz Day, people kept telling him that they couldn't believe all these folks woke up for this. "I say, 'We never went to bed!'" he quipped, only half-kidding. You can watch video of the entire event on the International Jazz Day site here. The day started at 6:30 a.m. with drummers and dancers on the cobbled ground of Congo Square in what is now Louis Armstrong Park, the very spot where drummers and dancers gathered generations ago, slaves on their day off, free people of color and others drawing on the African and Haitian traditions they'd brought along the way. Over time, that developed into more elaborate musical forms, taken up by the pianists entertaining in the brothels and parlors of the neighboring Storyville development around the turn of the 20th century, and then out to the streets with the brass bands. That became jazz, and this very spot was its birthplace. The full evolution of the form played out in the course of the next hour.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloaded PDF File of the Original First-Edi- Pete Extracted More Music from the Song Form of the Chart That Adds Refreshing Contrast
    DECEMBER 2016 VOLUME 83 / NUMBER 12 President Kevin Maher Publisher Frank Alkyer Editor Bobby Reed Managing Editor Brian Zimmerman Contributing Editor Ed Enright Creative Director ŽanetaÎuntová Design Assistant Markus Stuckey Circulation Manager Kevin R. Maher Assistant to the Publisher Sue Mahal Bookkeeper Evelyn Oakes Editorial Intern Izzy Yellen ADVERTISING SALES Record Companies & Schools Jennifer Ruban-Gentile 630-941-2030 [email protected] Musical Instruments & East Coast Schools Ritche Deraney 201-445-6260 [email protected] OFFICES 102 N. Haven Road, Elmhurst, IL 60126–2970 630-941-2030 / Fax: 630-941-3210 http://downbeat.com [email protected] CUSTOMER SERVICE 877-904-5299 / [email protected] CONTRIBUTORS Senior Contributors: Michael Bourne, Aaron Cohen, Howard Mandel, John McDonough Atlanta: Jon Ross; Austin: Kevin Whitehead; Boston: Fred Bouchard, Frank- John Hadley; Chicago: John Corbett, Alain Drouot, Michael Jackson, Peter Margasak, Bill Meyer, Mitch Myers, Paul Natkin, Howard Reich; Denver: Norman Provizer; Indiana: Mark Sheldon; Iowa: Will Smith; Los Angeles: Earl Gibson, Todd Jenkins, Kirk Silsbee, Chris Walker, Joe Woodard; Michigan: John Ephland; Minneapolis: Robin James; Nashville: Bob Doerschuk; New Orleans: Erika Goldring, David Kunian, Jennifer Odell; New York: Alan Bergman, Herb Boyd, Bill Douthart, Ira Gitler, Eugene Gologursky, Norm Harris, D.D. Jackson, Jimmy Katz, Jim Macnie, Ken Micallef, Dan Ouellette, Ted Panken, Richard Seidel, Tom Staudter, Jack Vartoogian, Michael Weintrob; North Carolina: Robin
    [Show full text]
  • Luboš Soukup Recorded His New Album Země (Earth) with Guitarist Lionel Loueke
    PRESS RELEASE 20 Nov 2017 LUBOŠ SOUKUP RECORDED HIS NEW ALBUM ZEMĚ (EARTH) WITH GUITARIST LIONEL LOUEKE The young saxophonist and composer Luboš Soukup, an exceptional talent on the Czech Jazz scene has been representing Czech music in Denmark for several years. Following his studies in Copenhagen, he has been living and working in Denmark and earlier this year he received the prestigious “Music Talent” Award from the Danish Music Union (Dansk Musiker Forbund). In his home country he is known above all as member of the Czech-Polish quintet Inner Spaces (whose album Light Year received the “Anděl” Award for the jazz Album of the Year in 2012) and the progressive big band “Concept Art Orchestra” (whose album The Prague Six received the “Anděl” Award for the jazz Album of the Year in 2015). He is also a member of the Points band and various other projects; this year, for example, he took part in the recording of Jaromír Honzák’s new album. In Denmark Soukup has performed with the MAdHAs group and, not least, with his own quartet founded in 2012 and whose current members are the German pianist Christian Pabst, Danish drummer MortEn Hæsum and, most recently, the double bassist Morten Haxhlom, also from Denmark. It was in Denmark two years ago that Soukup met with the brilliant Beninese guitarist Lionel LouEke best known for his collaboration with such luminaries as Herbie Hancock, Dave Holland, Chris Potter, Sting, Cassandra Wilson, Santana, Marcus Miller and Terence Blanchard. Soukup first met Loueke at the jazz workshop for professional jazz musicians in Vallekilde.
    [Show full text]
  • Billy Hart Retrospective Featuring Billy Hart with Plus and Many More
    BILLY HART RETROSPECTIVE FEATURING BILLY HART WITH QUEST DAVE LIEBMAN RICHIE BEIRACH RON MCCLURE ENCHANCE CRAIG TABORN DAVE HOLLAND JOSHUA REDMAN OLIVER LAKE EDDIE HENDERSON BILLY HART QUARTET ETHAN IVERSON MARK TURNER BEN STREET OCEANS OF TIME DAVID KIKOSKI CRAIG HANDY CHRIS POTTER MARK FELDMAN DAVID FIUCZYNSKI CECIL MCBEE PLUS FRED HERSCH ANAT COHEN DUO DR. MICHAEL WHITE QUARTET JULIAN LAGE TRIO JOEY ALEXANDER TRIO CLAIRE DALY QUINTET CHARLIE HUNTER TRIO LADY BIANCA GROUP GRUPO FALSO BAIANO BABATUNDE LEA AND FRIENDS AND MANY MORE So many great jazz masters have had tributes to their talent and contributions, I felt one for Billy was way overdue. He is truly one of the greatest drummers in jazz history. He has been on thousands of recordings over his 50-year career and, in turn, has enhanced the careers of several exceptional musicians. He has also been a true friend to Healdsburg Jazz Festival, performing here 11 out of the past 17 years. Many people do not know his deep contributions to jazz and the vast number of musicians he has performed and recorded with over the years as leader, sideman and collaborator: Shirley Horn, Wes Montgomery, Betty Carter, Jimmy Smith, McCoy Tyner, Miles Davis, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Stan Getz, and so many more (see the Billy Hart discography on our website). When he began to lead his own bands in 1977, they proved to be both disciplined and daring. For this tribute, we will take you through his musical history, and showcase his deep passion for jazz and the breadth of his achievements.
    [Show full text]